Algebraic Geometry on Imaginary Triangles

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Algebraic Geometry on Imaginary Triangles INTERNATIONAL ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF GEOMETRY VOLUME 11 NO. 2 PAGE 71–82 (2018) Algebraic geometry on imaginary triangles Sergiy Koshkin (Communicated by Gudrun Albrecht) ABSTRACT We extend the notion of triangle to imaginary triangles with complex valued sides and angles, and parametrize families of such triangles by plane algebraic curves. We study in detail families of triangles with two commensurable angles, and apply the theory of plane Cremona transformations to find “Pythagorean theorems" for these triangles, which are interpreted as the implicit equations of their parametrizing curves. Keywords: Pythagorean triples, Pythagorean theorem, commensurable triangle, Chebyshev polynomials, rational curve, quadratic Cremona transformation, base point, exceptional curve AMS Subject Classification (2010): Primary: 14H50 ; Secondary: 14Q05; 14E07; 51M04. 1. Introduction The use of algebraic geometry to study families of triangles has ancient roots. Back around 250 AD in the famous problem II.8 of his Arithmetica (on the margins of which Fermat wrote his famous comment) Diophantus introduced a trick for finding right triangles with three integer sides, the Pythagorean triples. This trick will later be interpreted (starting with Kronecker’s 1901 algebra textbook, according to [14]) as constructing a rational parametrization of the unit circle, an algebraic curve parametrizing the family of right triangles up to similarity. Around 940 AD Al Khazen proposed the problem of finding right triangles with rational sides and integer area. In modern terms, the problem amounts to finding rational points on some elliptic curves. Other families of triangles with rational sides are actively studied today using elliptic and higher genus curves [19, 20]. In this paper we will apply to triangles the classical algebraic geometry of plane curves and Cremona transformations developed in the works of 19th century authors such as Plücker, Cayley, Cremona, Clebsch and Max Noether before the onset of a more abstract modern approach after Hilbert, see [4] for a historical survey, and [8,9, 22, 23] for modern introductions. Classical algebraic geometry is attractive due to its more intuitive flavor, especially when applied to the elementary geometry of triangles. Since algebraic geometry works best over the field of complex numbers it is helpful to expand the notion of triangle accordingly, hence the imaginary triangles of the title. Specifically, we will use algebraic geometry to study what we call p : q triangles, which are similar to the isosceles triangles, but with the base angles in an integer ratio p : q. As with the right triangles, parametrized by a conic, their parametrizing curves are rational. In fact, they can be parametrized by the Chebyshev polynomials (of the second kind), so we call these curves the Chebyshev curves. As with the right triangles, one can look for triples of integers that can be sides of p : q triangles (“Pythagorean triples"), or for algebraic relations among those sides (“Pythagorean theorems"). These problems can be naturally interpreted as looking for rational points on, and implicit equations of, the Chebyshev curves. Despite the classical flavor of the problems to the best of the author’s knowledge such triangle families were first studied only in 1954 by Oppenheim (1 : 3 and 2 : 3 cases, see [10]). Later Oppenheim, together with Daykin, explicitly characterized primitive integer triples for all p : q families, it seems fair to call them the Oppenheim triples. Their result was published back in 1967 [6], but special cases and related results were rediscovered later multiple times, see [2,3,7, 11, 13, 15, 16, 17, 21, 24]. However, almost all attention went to the Oppenheim triples, while the “Pythagorean theorems", and algebro-geometric connections, were largely overlooked. We hope to remedy this oversight. Received : 12-03-2018, Accepted : 26-09-2018 * Corresponding author Imaginary triangles 2. Imaginary triangles and SSS Trigonometry literally translates from Greek as “the measurement of triangles". But sine and cosine functions extend to complex values, and the trigonometric formulas continue to hold. It turns out that even some facts about the ordinary Euclidean triangles are best explained by looking at complex values. But what sorts of “triangles" would have complex sides and angles? The principal relations between sides and angles of the ordinary triangles are given by the laws of sines and cosines, so we should make sure that they continue to hold. Since trigonometric functions are 2π periodic, even for complex values, we should identify angles differing by a multiple of 2π. Moreover, because cosines are even functions, and the overall sign change in the angles does not alter the law of sines, we should identify triples of angles differing by the overall sign change. This leads to the following definition. Definition 2.1. Let α; β; γ 2 C represent classes modulo 2π with α + β + γ = π (mod 2π), and let [−α; −β; −γ] ∼ [α; β; γ]. Denote by Λ the resulting set of equivalence classes [α; β; γ]. An 3 imaginary triangle (with ordered sides) is a pair (a; b; c); [α; β; γ] 2 C × Λ of sides and “opposite" angles, such that the laws of sines and cosines hold for them. We call c the base of the triangle, and α; β the base angles. The imaginary triangles can be interpreted as living in C2 with sides and angles “measured" using a bilinear form, (not a Hermitian one), which extends the inner product on R2. This interpretation is nicely described in Kendig’s paper [12]. Our definition is slightly more refined since the bilinear form only defines complex valued sides up to sign. But even with our definition we can not get the side triples to cover all of C3. Suppose c = 0, for example, then by the law of cosines b2 = a2, and so b = ±a. Any zero-side triangle must be either isosceles or “anti-isosceles"! In particular, if an imaginary triangle has two zero sides then all three sides are zero. We will show, however, that this is the only restriction on the sides (Theorem 2.1). 1 1 1 But first let us look at zero-area triangles. Recall that A = 2 bc sin α = 2 ac sin β = 2 ab sin γ gives the area of an (ordinary) triangle. The law of sines a : b : c = sin α : sin β : sin γ insures that all three expressions give the same value, even for imaginary triangles. But as long as we exclude the zero-side triangles, having sin α = 0, say, forces sin β = sin γ = 0. In other words, zero-area triangles with non-zero sides can only have angles that are 0 or π, see Fig.1 (a). But then by the law of cosines a2 = b2 + c2 ± 2bc = (b ± c)2 and a ± b ± c = 0 for at least one choice of signs. This means that a triangle has zero-area if and only if ∆ := (a + b + c)(−a + b + c)(a − b + c)(a + b − c) = 4s(s − a)(s − b)(s − c) = 0; (2.1) 1 where s := 2 (a + b + c). One can show using the remaining laws of cosines, that the factors in (2.1) correspond to [π; π; π], [π; 0; 0], [0; π; 0] and [0; 0; π] angle triples. If the first of these triples looks impossible, recall that 3π = π ( mod 2π). The second product in (2.1) should look familiar, it is 4 times the expression A under the square root in the “Heron" area formula (likely due to Archimedes). So for ordinary triangles ∆ = 16A2. Now let us turn to the angles. Any pair α; β can serve as the base angles of an imaginary triangle, indeed γ = π − α − β, a = sin α, b = sin β, c = sin(α + β) define one such triangle. However, this construction may produce a triangle with all sides equal to zero. This degeneration will not happen if at least one of α; β is neither 0 nor π, and in that case the law of sines implies the law of cosines. To see this implication note that by the law of sines there is a z such that a = z sin α, b = z sin β, c = z sin(α + β), and use the lesser known identity sin(α + β) sin(α − β) = sin2(α) − sin2(β): (2.2) We will now prove a generalization of the side-side-side theorem (SSS) to imaginary triangles. The elementary SSS states that a triangle’s angles can be uniquely recovered from its sides, and gives a geometric construction for these angles. The uniqueness, however, can not hold for the zero-side triangles. If c = 0, for example, and a = b then [α; π − α; 0] would satisfy the law of sines for any α 2 C since sin α = sin(π − α), see Fig.1 (a). And if a = −b then [α; −α; π] would work as well. But even with the zero-side triangles excluded, we cannot use the usual geometric constructions to prove SSS. Let us turn to complex analysis instead. 2A Given three sides we can try to recover the angles by using the area formulas as equations: sin α = bc and sin β = 2A sin z = w cos z = w z 2 ac . It follows from complex analysis that the system , e has a solution C if and only 2 2 if w + we = 1, and this solution is unique modulo 2π. In particular, sin z =pw is solvable for any w 2 C, and the solution’s class modulo 2π is uniquely determined by a choice of value for 1 − w2. This result implies that the angles (or rather their classes in Λ) are determined uniquely by non-zero sides. www.iejgeo.com 72 S.
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